Sans Superellipse Enram 11 is a regular weight, very wide, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, sportswear, tech ui, posters, futuristic, sleek, sporty, techy, streamlined, streamlined modernity, digital friendliness, speed emphasis, geometric cohesion, rounded, extended, oblique, monoline, superelliptic.
A rounded, extended sans with a consistent monoline stroke and a pronounced rightward slant. Counters and terminals are built from softened rectangles and superellipse-like curves, producing squarish rounds in forms such as O, Q, and 0. Joins are smooth and corners are heavily radiused, while horizontal strokes often taper into rounded ends, keeping the texture clean and flowing. The overall rhythm is spacious and airy, with broad set widths and a low, steady stroke contrast that maintains an even color in text.
Best suited to display roles where its wide, slanted stance can read as intentional: wordmarks, headlines, product branding, and technology-forward packaging. It also fits interface or dashboard accent typography where a clean, rounded futuristic voice is desired, especially at larger sizes where the superelliptic detailing is most apparent.
The design reads as modern and forward-leaning, with a speed-oriented, technical tone. Its rounded geometry softens the engineered structure, giving it a friendly sci‑fi feel rather than an aggressive one. The oblique stance and wide proportions add a sense of motion suited to contemporary digital and product contexts.
The letterforms appear designed to combine a fast, oblique silhouette with rounded-rect geometry for a contemporary, engineered look. The consistent stroke weight and softened corners suggest an intention to feel streamlined and digital while remaining approachable and legible in short text.
Distinctive squarish-round bowls and open apertures help preserve clarity despite the slant. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect geometry, with especially wide, streamlined figures; the 0 and 8 emphasize the superelliptic construction. The capital set feels particularly aerodynamic, while the lowercase keeps similar width and curvature for cohesive word shapes.